A devastating earthquake struck the ancient Silk Road city of Bam in
southeastern Iran on Friday, killing more than 5,000 people and injuring
thousands of others, Iranian news agency IRNA said.

Graphic showing the location of the Iran earthquake
[AFP]

Initial estimates suggested
5,000-6,000 people died in the earthquake which measured 6.3 on the Richter
scale, the official IRNA news agency quoted a senior official as saying.

Mohammad Ali Karimi, governor of Kerman province, where
Bam is located, was said to have given the figure in a
telephone conversation with President Mohammad Khatami.

Iranian television said about 70 per cent of the buildings in the historic
city, a popular tourist destination some 1,000 km (600 miles) southeast of the
capital, Tehran, had collapsed and many people were feared trapped under the
rubble.

Reuters witnesses said many houses had been flattened and squares were packed
with crying children and people left without a home, huddled in blankets to
protect them from the cold.

Distraught relatives wept next to corpses shrouded in blankets. Hundreds of
bodies were bundled into trucks. Mechanized diggers hollowed out trenches where
the dead were buried quickly without rites.

People bury the bodies of some of those who were
killed in earthquake in the city of Bam in 1000 kms 630 miles southeast of
Tehran on Friday Dec. 26, 2003. [AP]

"I have lost all my family. My parents, my grandmother and two sisters are
under the rubble," said Maryam, 17.

One old woman, disconsolate with grief, smeared her face with dirt, only able
to utter: "My child, my child."

Iranian television said around 30,000 people were injured in and around the
city, which had a population of some 200,000 people.

Angry people accused the government of doing nothing to help them and said
they were still without tents, water and heating.

Witnesses said the road to Bam was choked with ambulances and people
desperate to find family members.

State media said two of Bam's hospitals had collapsed, crushing many of the
staff, and remaining hospitals were full. The wounded were ferried to
neighboring towns.

Russia and Germany were swift to offer help to try to find any survivors
under the rubble of collapsed buildings. Other European nations have also said
they are ready to act.

"You can be sure that we will do all we can in our powers to make available
all necessary humanitarian assistance," German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder told
Iranian President Mohammad Khatami in a letter.

Russia's Emergencies Ministry, highly skilled in reacting to the country's
frequent natural and man-made disasters, has rapid response units of doctors,
paramedics and dog-handlers -- who can find trapped people.

A large part of Bam's ancient citadel, one of Iran's best-loved tourist
magnets, had been destroyed, Karimi said.

The citadel, dating back 2,000 years, contained fortifications, towers,
buildings, stables and a mosque.

Bam was located on the old Silk Road route between China and Europe used by
merchants and travelers for centuries, and contained inns, a gymnasium, a
theological school and bazaars, according to tourism Web sites.

The quake struck at about 5:30 a.m. (0200 GMT) when most people in the city
would probably have been asleep. The government mounted an immediate rescue
operation in the date-growing area where houses are traditionally made of
mud-brick.

Quakes are a regular occurrence in Iran, which is crossed by several major
faultlines in the earth's structure.

In June last year, a tremor measuring 6.3 on the Richter scale hit northern
Iran, killing at least 229 people and injuring more than 1,000.

Some 35,000 people were killed in 1990 when earthquakes of up to 7.7 on the
Richter scale hit the northwest of Iran. Tehran was hit by a quake of about
seven on the Richter scale in 1830.